China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Bridge to everywhere

Gigantic span connecting HK, Macao, Zhuhai clears obstacles

- By LUIS LIU in Hong Kong luisliu@chinadaily­hk.com

Builders of the massive Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macao Bridge — which, when completed, will be the world’s longest bridge over water — overcame one of the most complex challenges ever to confront engineers.

The Y-shaped span, which will link the three cities, incorporat­es the latest engineerin­g technology and design, enabling the structures to withstand a magnitude 8 earthquake, a super typhoon or a strike by a cargo vessel weighing 300,000 metric tons.

Engineers were confronted with complex geological and topographi­cal conditions, taking into account prevailing winds and tidal forces.

From an artificial island near Hong Kong Internatio­nal Airport, the structure runs west to another artificial island off the eastern shore of Macao, a distance of 55 kilometers, 20 times the length of San Francisco’s Golden Gate Bridge. The new bridge will also connect to a town being built on a reclaimed land in Macao.

A journey by land, which can take up to four hours, will be shortened to as little as 30 minutes once the bridge is completed, according to official projection­s.

The bridge, which is expected to be put to use by the end of this year, is actually a series of bridges and tunnels crossing the Pearl River estuary — 30 km above water, 7 km of underwater tunnels and a number of artificial islands.

The major section will provide a dual three-lane expressway to handle traffic up to speeds of 100 km/h. The total bridge width is 33.1 meters, with two 14.25-meter tunnels and a vertical clearance of 5.1 meters.

As many as 4,000 ships a day are expected to navigate waters above the tunnel, serving ports around the estuary.

The artificial islands constructe­d at the ends of the sea tunnel are reinforced by 120 giant steel cylinders, each 22.5 meters in diameter and 55 meters high, equivalent to the height of an 18-story building. Each cylinder weighs 550 tons, about the same as an Airbus A380, the world’s largest passenger jet.

A total of 400,000 tons of steel were used in the massive project, equivalent to 60 times the steel used to build the Eiffel Tower. The bridge is designed for a 120-year life span. Most big, cross-sea bridges were designed to last 100 years, according to historical data.

The new bridge also required close attention to environmen­talissues in the Pearl River Delta, including corridors that sustain marine life. That meant the bridge design had to take into account river channels, fundamenta­l hydrology and navigation routes to ensure the natural ecosystem was not disrupted and channels blocked.

Su Quanke, chief engineer at the Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macao Bridge Authority, said in a briefing that his team had overcome more than 80 technical obstacles to lay a solid foundation for the bridge.

“All its major units are standardiz­ed. The manufactur­ing is industrial­ized. The installati­on can be implemente­d on a large scale with refinement of detail,” he said.

Moreover, it uses a digital control system and its maintenanc­e can be easy and efficient, he added. “These practices have received recognitio­n from the bridge design and constructi­on industry around the world,” he said.

Meng Fanchao, chief designer of the bridge, said the design team solicited advice of experts in various fields, including environmen­tal protection, navigation, hydrology, aviation, social economy, bridge engineerin­g, engineerin­g technology and weather.

Finally, the team selected the route from among a dozen final proposals after scientific appraisals, Meng said.

A blueprint for the massive infrastruc­ture project was introduced in 1983 almost as a fantasy of Hong Kong tycoon Gordon Wu Yingsheung. His vision was to accelerate integratio­n of the two sides of the Pearl River. Originally, the project was not supposed to include tunnels — only bridges — between Hong Kong’s Tuen Mun and Z huh ai,Guang dong province.

Z huh aiwa sin its early stages of developmen­t at the time. As one of the first special economic zones set up by the central government in the 1980s to attract foreign investors, the city needed more convenient transporta­tion to Hong Kong, Wu said in his proposal.

After 1997, the authoritie­s saw potential in the plan. The original design was dropped, and planning started on a link from Zhuhai and Macao, linking to Hong Kong’s new internatio­nal airport.

After rounds of negotiatio­ns between the three cities’ authoritie­s, in 2009, the State Council nailed down the final plan and kicked off constructi­on the same year.

The cost of the bridge was estimated to exceed 115.9 billion yuan ($17 billion), according to the bridge authority.

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 ?? LI JIANSHU / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? The Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macao Bridge under constructi­on in April.
LI JIANSHU / FOR CHINA DAILY The Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macao Bridge under constructi­on in April.
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